More than 200,000 products drawn from a network of over 100 vetted suppliers fill the Impact Store on Right Gift, which is a strange sentence to write about something filed under gifts. This is a procurement platform for nonprofits, structured as a Benefit Corporation, and the word "gift" in the name points at charitable giving, not at a shop for birthday presents. Anyone arriving expecting a consumer gift store will be in the wrong place within a click.

What Right Gift actually sells is buying power. It pools the purchasing of the nonprofits on its books, says it works with more than 1,000 organizations, and uses that combined volume to negotiate enterprise-level pricing that a single small charity could never command on its own.

The headline promise is a budget that stretches: the platform claims its members extend program spending by more than 20 percent on average. Collective purchasing is the whole idea, a group of buyers acting as one to reach prices none of them could hit alone, and the Benefit Corporation label signals that the social mission is meant to be baked into the company rather than bolted on. It reads less like a standard business directory entry for a single vendor and more like a co-op with a storefront attached.

What the platform sells to nonprofits

The site splits into a store and a set of back-office tools, and the two halves are meant to work together. A nonprofit shops from a vetted catalogue on one side and manages budgets, requests and reporting on the other.

Sections cover the Shop Store, a Platform menu spanning Collective Purchasing, Food Solutions, Bulk Purchasing, Wish List Campaigns and Business Solutions, plus Company, Blog, Suppliers and a Contact page. It is organised around what a charity does with money, and that focus runs through every part of the layout.

The Impact Store and its suppliers

The store is the front door. Products come from a vetted network Right Gift calls impact suppliers, and the catalogue is organised around what charities actually distribute: Food and Nutrition, with shelf-stable boxes, packs, kits and custom kitting; Hygiene kits; Apparel; and School Supplies. These are the categories of an organisation feeding, clothing and equipping people, not one shopping for novelties. A nonprofit buying in bulk needs suppliers that will not vanish mid-order, so the vetting claim is doing real work, and the custom kitting option speaks to groups assembling standardised care packages at volume.

Food and Nutrition getting top billing tells you where the demand sits: hunger programs move the most product. The Apparel and School Supplies lines point at the same buyers from a different angle, the clothing drives and back-to-school pushes a charity runs on a calendar, and the shelf-stable emphasis in the food range is a nod to how these goods actually get stored and shipped.

Bulk procurement and fulfillment

Behind the store sits the logistics. Right Gift offers bulk and wholesale procurement with fulfillment support that covers parcel shipping, freight, bulk palletizing and multi-site distribution. For an organisation running programs in several locations, that last piece is the hard part, and having it handled by the same platform that sourced the goods removes a layer of coordination.

This is the supply-chain machinery underneath the friendly storefront, and it is described in concrete operational terms. A food bank moving pallets to a dozen sites has different problems from a small charity mailing a hundred parcels, and the range of fulfillment options is pitched at both ends.

For a nonprofit without a warehouse or a shipping desk of its own, outsourcing that step is often the difference between a program that scales and one that stalls.

Spend management and wish list campaigns

Two more tools round out the platform. A Spend Management dashboard handles budget assignment, request management and audit-ready reporting, which speaks directly to the grant-funded world where every dollar has to be accounted for to a funder. Separately, In-Kind Wish List Campaigns let a nonprofit turn donor generosity into specific, program-needed items instead of unrestricted cash that then has to be spent and justified. Both features fit the same buyer: a program manager who has to show exactly where the money went.

The audit-ready reporting is the quiet standout, because grant compliance eats staff time that a small charity does not have to spare. The wish list tool solves a softer problem too. It gives donors a concrete item to fund in place of an abstract appeal, which tends to loosen wallets and keeps the resulting goods aligned with what the program actually needs. Right Gift states there are no subscriptions and no hidden fees, which, if it holds, lowers the barrier for a cash-strapped charity to try the thing without a standing cost hanging over it.

The claims and what stands behind them

The numbers on Right Gift are large, and this is where a careful reader slows down. More than 1,000 nonprofits, 200,000-plus products, 20-percent-plus budget gains: all of it comes from Right Gift's own site, and almost none of it has been confirmed independently. A search for outside reviews of the platform turns up almost nothing. There are profiles on Crunchbase and a listing as a Blackbaud partner, and a ZoomInfo entry that describes the company as experiencing very low activity levels, which sits oddly next to the thousand-nonprofit figure.

No third-party review counts or ratings surfaced at all. For a service that trades on trust with charities, that silence is not damning, but it is a gap a cautious buyer will notice. A platform can be perfectly real and still be early, small, or simply quiet online, and the ZoomInfo note about low activity could mean any of those; it is a flag to check, not a verdict on its own.

Search also muddies the water. A separately owned company with a near-identical name, Right Gifting, sells personalised gifts and mugs and carries its own consumer reviews; those belong to that business and say nothing about this procurement platform. A visitor checking the reputation of the nonprofit service has to be careful not to credit it with someone else's stars, because the two turn up side by side in results and the names are one letter apart.

Contact is the other soft spot. The homepage shows no phone number, no email and no physical address; reaching a human means clicking through a Contact Us link or a Talk to an Expert call to action. For a platform like Right Gift asking nonprofits to route real purchasing budgets through it, contact details kept a click out of sight is a fair thing to note, even if a form does the job in the end. An organisation about to move serious money usually wants a name and a number up front, not a lead-capture button.

So the picture is mixed and honest about being so. Right Gift's offering is coherent and specific, the tooling matches the audience, and the pricing pitch makes sense for small charities pooling their weight. The Benefit Corporation structure at least signals that the mission is written into how the company is built.

What is missing is any outside voice confirming that the platform does at scale what it says it does. The claims are big, the independent record is close to empty, and a nonprofit weighing whether to trust its program budget to Right Gift is left to decide on the company's own word how much of the thousand-organisation story to believe.